[clari.sports.features] Seniors Baseball: The League of Memories

clarinews@clarinet.com (FREDERICK WATERMAN, UPI Sports Writer) (01/19/90)

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	WEST PALM BEACH, FLA. (UPI) -- For baseball fans, a seniors league
boxscore reads like a combined Hall of Fame ballot and waiver-wire
listing. For the players, every roster contains old friends and
memories.
	The inaugural season of the professional over-35 league has been a
success with the players, if not at the gate. Attendance for the
eight-team league has averaged less than 1,000 per game during the
three-month season, which ends the first week of February.
	The players, back in the world they trained for, lived in and left,
are on the field again with old adversaries and teammates.
	``I guess you could call it a reunion,'' said former San Diego and
Cleveland pitcher Juan Eichelberger, now 36 and a member of the West
Palm Beach Tropics.
	When an athlete is cut for the last time, he loses the recognition
which in the United States accompanies the professional athlete. For
these former major-leaguers, Senior Professional Baseball has restored,
temporarily, some of that lost aura.
	``I get a personal pleasure just by coming out the clubhouse door
and seeing the people there, waiting for us,'' said pitcher Ray Burris,
39, who played for seven major-league teams. ``One day I'll be too old
to come to a ballpark, but now people still know the name on the back of
my uniform. They'll say: `I remember you,' and it touches me. There's
not one player who doesn't enjoy that. The recognition is nice.''
	In the minors, every young player is looking for the chance to
reach the big time. In the seniors, there are scattered hopes of
returning to the big leagues once more.
	Outfielder Lee Lacy had a career batting average of .286 during his
16 years in the majors. Now 41, he is hitting over .310 in the seniors
league and still believes he has major-league ability.
	``They shouldn't run a guy out if he can still play,'' said Lacy,
cut by Baltimore in the spring of 1988. ``Most of the players down here
were forced out of the game. Fifty percent of the guys here could still
play in the major leagues, but if an owner says you can't play, that's
it. Guys here are still throwing 95 to 97 miles an hour.
	``Playing here is so gratifying, there's a lot of self-satisfaction
in showing that you can still play,'' said Lacy, who owns and operates a
telephone answering service in Calabasas, Calif. ``This is great
therapy.''
	Asked why the older players were forced out, Lacy quickly
responded: ``Because of our salaries. We went on strike and we fought
for free agency. We made the owners negotiate at a fair level and
there's still bitterness on their part. That was shown in the Collusion
One ruling.''
	Teammate Tito Landrum, 35 and an unabashed fan of his sport, said,
``Nobody wants that uniform to be taken off him.'' Despite playing 10
years in the majors, Landrum has been collecting the autographs of his
seniors teammates and opponents.
	``I've had Rollie Fingers, Mickey Rivers and all the other guys I
really admire sign programs for me and balls and a bat,'' said Landrum,
showing no embarrassment. ``These guys were great baseball players.''
	Each team has a salary cap of $550,000 for the season and no player
can make more than $15,000 per month. The minimum is $2,000 a month.
	Michelle Jaminet, a vice-president of the Tropics, said, ``The
players' attitude seems to be: `Nobody's going to get rich, so let's
just play ball and have a good time.''
	While the salary is paltry by today's standards in baseball, some
players need the money desperately. Fingers, who made millions, lost it
all in bad investments and admittedly foolish businesses. The man who
once spent $225,000 on Egyptian Arabian horses filed for bankruptcy in
1989.
	``I'm starting over again,'' said Fingers, 43, who is playing in
the seniors league to pay the rent on his home in California. And,
despite having a 3.47 ERA in his first 23 innings here, he thinks about
the long-shot possibility that a major-league team might ``take a
chance'' on baseball's all-time leader in saves.
	The future of the seniors league is uncertain, but attendance has
risen 20 percent in January. Jaminet says that with the growing
involvement of corporate sponsors, there will ``definitely'' be a second
season, although a few of the eight teams will switch to new cities and
teams may be formed in Arizona..
	Landrum said, ``We hoped it would be as successful as the seniors
golf tour. The level of play and talent has proved this isn't like a
beer league. It's more like double-A or triple-A baseball.''
	``But for me it's been great. I still have butterflies before every
game and baseball's still so special to me -- that's why I play.''
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